There are selective differences between the BALP isoforms in CRF compared with healthy adults. The commercial BALP immunoassays are comparable with each other but are unable to distinguish the BALP isoform-specific differences in CRF patients.
16 patients with classical rheumatoid arthritis (RA) selected at random underwent fasting for 7--10 days, followed by a 9-week period on a lactovegetarian diet. 10 RA patients acted as controls, taking normal diet. Pain, stiffness, medication, and clinical and biochemical findings were recorded before fasting, on the first day after the conclusion of the fasting period, and at the end of the lactovegetarian period. After fasting, 5 of 15 patients showed objective signs of improvement, compared with only one of the controls. The fasting patients showed reduced pain, stiffness, consumption of analgetics, several clinical variables, and serum concentration of orosomucoid. At the conclusion of the lactovegetarian diet period only one Diet patient showed objective improvement. No differences were found between the Diet patients and the controls concerning symptoms, drug consumption, or clinical and biochemical variables. We conclude that fasting may produce subjective and objective improvements in RA, though of short duration, but the findings of this investigation do not indicate that lactovegetarian diet has any beneficial effects.
We propose that clinical remission in collagenous colitis is defined as a mean of <3 stools/day and a mean of <1 watery stool per day and disease activity to be a daily mean of ≥3 stools or a mean of ≥1 watery stool.
To monitor endogenous production of cysteinyl-containing leukotrienes, the end-metabolite leukotriene E4 (LTE4) was analysed in urine. Results obtained with a sensitive enzyme immunoassay (EIA), performed on crude urine samples correlated well with data obtained from a previously reported radioimmunoassay. Enzyme immunoassay analysis of unextracted urine was justified by an excellent agreement between analyses in crude samples and measurements achieved after purification on solid phase extraction followed by separation on reversed-phase high performance liquid chromatography. Moreover, LTE4 was stable in urine samples stored at -20 degrees C, for months without the addition of preservatives. The stability of LTE4 in urine was not improved by addition of the antioxidant 4-hydroxy-TEMPO and pH adjustment to 9. As assessed by EIA analysis in crude urine samples, baseline values for urinary leukotriene E4 were not significantly different between atopic asthmatic subjects and non-asthmatic individuals, and there was no diurnal variation in urinary excretion of LTE4 in healthy subjects. However, we confirmed earlier data on significantly higher basal levels of urinary LTE4 in aspirin-intolerant asthmatics. In addition, a post-challenge increase in urinary LTE4 levels was detected in association with allergen-induced airway obstruction in atopic asthmatics. The per cent increase in urinary LTE4 was similar, irrespective of whether the samples were purified or not prior to EIA. Thus, combined with random validation by high performance liquid chromatography, the strategy of direct EIA of serially diluted urine samples was found to be a good index of in vivo production of leukotrienes. This was further reinforced by the demonstration that pretreatment with the leukotriene biosynthesis inhibitor Bay x 1005 inhibited the post allergen-challenge increase in urinary LTE4, as shown both with unpurified and purified samples.
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